In honor of Presidents' Day, we've rounded up a handful of historical log hideaways for sale. Channel your inner Lincoln!

Inside this 1795 chestnut log cabin is a stone fireplace and a mantel from a local historical plantation. It sits on 31 acres and also comes with a 2-stall barn. We're smitten with the charming upstairs bedroom, which epitomizes coziness!

Can't you just picture a fire roaring inside this 1796 log home? It's situated in Pennsylvania horse country and comes with a documented history of its past. The inside boasts everything we'd want in a log home, including a wood stove and a library area. There's even an outdoor stone fireplace for those cozy Mid-Atlantic winters.

This Tennessee charmer comes with a large barn and sits on seven acres. The original 1800s detail has been preserved inside, so if you're in the market for hand-hewn beams and wide-plank floors, you might have just found your dream home.

If we were millionaires, we'd jump at the chance to buy this 4,084 square-foot, lakefront home — formerly the summer residence of the Hagadone family. The property includes 500 ft. of shoreline alongside the Nature Conservancy Preserve. Wouldn't it make a gorgeous B&B?

In 1946, Senator Robert R. Reynolds build a 4,000-sq. ft. summer home on a portion of the 241 acres he owned on Reynolds Mountain. The house was designed by renowned architect Douglas D. Ellington, who was also responsible for many of downtown Asheville's Art Deco buildings. Though it needs extensive restoration work, this beautiful log home offers spectacular year-round, long-range views of the surrounding area.

US Senator Oscar Underwood of Alabama built this log home in 1915 — and spared no expense. Rumor has it that it cost $60,000 to construct (equivalent to approximately 1.4 million in today's dollars) and was known to locals as the "$60,000 log cabin." The majestic "great room" features a 13-ft. wide stone fireplace. It all sits on over 9 acres.

A creek meanders through this 14.5-acre property, which was established in the 1930s as a dairy farm. The idyllic setting includes a beautiful log home and several outbuildings, including an outdoor pavilion with a fireplace.

Writer Elizabeth Finkelstein is a self-proclaimed old house addict on a lifelong hunt for her perfect historic home. From big Victorian fixer-uppers to tiny colonials to mid-century modern masterpieces, Elizabeth believes that the best homes show the charm of having been loved over time. She chronicles it all on her website CIRCA, which showcases beautiful old houses for sale across the country.

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